The primary goal of the Grid Resilience Technical Assistance Consortium, also known as the Grid Resilience and Climate Change Impacts Analysis (GRACI) grants, is to support state energy officials, public service commissions, and utilities by providing technical assistance to accelerate analysis of climate change threats and impacts on electric grid infrastructure, describe best practices for grid operations and investments, and provide additional information and analysis to aid in grid resilience planning and decision-making.
The GRACI program will assemble a consortium of universities, non-profit, and for-profit organizations to provide technical assistance to states, territories, and Tribal entities receiving DOE’s Grid Resilience State and Tribal Formula Grants.
Selections
On June 27, 2024, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Grid Deployment Office announced $4.6 million for six applicants to provide technical assistance to accelerate analysis of regional climate change threats and impacts on electric grid infrastructure. This investment, made through the Grid Resilience and Climate Change Impacts Analysis (GRACI) partnerships, will use risk assessments and modeling to support recipients of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law’s Grid Resilience State and Tribal Formula Grants with rapid decision-making to prioritize investments for impactful benefits. The Grid Resilience State and Tribal Formula Grants are designed to strengthen and modernize America’s power grid against wildfires, extreme weather, and other natural disasters.
Pointerra
- Pointerra will collaborate with three electric utilities (Avangrid, Eversource, National Grid) and three university partners (Cornell University, University at Albany - State University of New York, and the University of Connecticut) to develop a cost-benefit methodology to determine the long-term resilience value of grid resilience investments in the Northeast.
- Pointerra will acquire LiDAR (light detection and ranging) technology and imagery data and use its Pointerra3D platform to automatically generate a digital twin of select circuits in each utility’s service territory. Pointerra’s utility and academic partners will then use these digital twins for modeling and simulation of resilience investments, such as asset hardening, line undergrounding, and vegetation management.
The University of Connecticut and University at Albany (The Research Foundation for the State University of New York):
- The University of Connecticut and University at Albany (The Research Foundation for the State University of New York) will work together to provide risk assessments and grid resilience investment guidance to several states in the Northeast, with each university bringing their respective strengths to the collaboration.
- The University at Albany will use numerical weather prediction models to identify key trends across the states for different climate hazards and potential climate scenarios.
- The University of Connecticut will use an outage prediction model, along with a risk assessment that takes into account the intersection of climate, outage, and socioeconomic risk, to drive grid resilience recommendations.
Baringa:
- Baringa will provide reports on grid resilience risks, vulnerabilities, and investments to enhance the decision-making of state energy offices in those regions.
- Baringa will also provide a current and future state-of-the-grid report for several utilities, which will assess utilities’ resilience investment strategies and include a methodology to forecast financial impact to assets from climate risk.
Texas A&M University and Prairie View A&M University:
- Texas A&M University and Prairie View A&M University will provide grid vulnerability assessments and risk planning guidance to state energy offices.
- Grid modeling and resilience researchers from the two universities will meet individually with state officials to understand their grid resilience objectives and direct their modeling and simulation capabilities on priority regions for each state.
- Analysis will focus in the areas of risk assessment, state-of-the-grid assessments, resilience strategy tradeoffs, and valuing resilience investments.
Creation Energy, LLC:
- Creation Energy will develop standard templates and guides to assist tribes in applying for grid resilience grant funds and equipping critical facilities with back-up power.
- These resources include a battery-sizing design tool, equipment specifications for indoor and outdoor designs, utility interconnection process guidance, and contractual templates for engaging with vendors.
- Creation Energy will also conduct outreach and assistance to tribes regarding using the templates to streamline procurement and deployment of their back-up power systems.
Background
On January 4, 2024, the Grid Deployment Office (GDO) released the Grid Resilience Technical Assistance Consortium funding opportunity for universities, non-profits, and industry organizations to provide technical assistance by leveraging existing solutions to support state energy officials, public service commissions, Tribal entities or utilities in grid resilience planning and decision-making that relates to understanding climate change threats and impacts on electric grid infrastructure.
The technical assistance partnerships under the GRACI program will be managed by ENERGYWERX, a collaboration made possible through an innovative Partnership Intermediary Agreement (PIA) set up by the DOE's Office of Technology Transitions (OTT). This agreement enables ENERGYWERX to broaden DOE’s engagement with innovative organizations and non-traditional partners, facilitating the rapid development, scaling, and deployment of clean energy solutions.
Learn more about the State and Tribal Resource Hub and the Grid Deployment Office.